
Comparative Civilizations Review Volume 61 Article 8 Number 61 Fall 2009 10-1-2009 Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The Continuing Relevance of the Views of Spengler and Toynbee on the Variability of the Rate of Cultural Change W. Reed Smith [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr Recommended Citation Smith, W. Reed (2009) "Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The onC tinuing Relevance of the Views of Spengler and Toynbee on the Variability of the Rate of Cultural Change," Comparative Civilizations Review: Vol. 61 : No. 61 , Article 8. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr/vol61/iss61/8 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the All Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Comparative Civilizations Review by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Smith: Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The Continuing Relevance o Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The Continuing Relevance of the Views of Spengler and Toynbee on the Variability of the Rate of Cultural Change W. Reed Smith, J.D., LL.M. Adjunct Professor, Tulane University [email protected] I. Introduction There is a consensus, displayed in the media every day, that some US regions are more advanced than others, and some more backward. New York and Boston are centers of Culture, the Ozarks and Alabama are backward. Why? Both Spengler and Toynbee had strong beliefs on the variability of the rate of cultural development in various regions that they noted in their own time. This paper will discuss their views, which turn out to be roughly the same, although they reflect, respectively, the famous pessimism and optimism of the two authors. Thereafter, this paper will seek to show that the views of Spengler and Toynbee are spot-on and that they accurately reflect the situation extant in the United States today.1 But before I attack this subject, I will note that I am describing a phenomenon—not necessarily endorsing either metropolitan progressivism nor rural conservatism. Obviously not all people who live in large cities are progressive nor all people in the 1 The analysis could be applied globally or to the entire West. However, the U.S. is the pre-eminent power of the declining West today, and the analysis fits the U. S. extremely well. Thus, the scope of this paper will be limited to applying the ideas of Spengler and Toynbee to the U. S. today, with, perhaps, a forgivable reference or two elsewhere. Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2009 1 11 u Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 61 [2009], No. 61, Art. 8 Comparative Civilizations Review, 2009 Fall suburbs or countryside conservative. This study is exploring a general tendency which is observable around the world— unequal development. Furthermore, not all "development" is good—no more than all traditions that conservatives want to save good either. II. Spengler's Megalopolitans Oswald Spengler wrote The Decline of the West (the "Decline")2 in what he considered the founding and most important country—or region - of the Western Culture, i.e., Germany. When Spengler wrote the Decline during World War I, Germany had been overshadowed, first by France, and then Great Britain for 2-1/2 centuries, from the time of the Thirty Years War. This perspective (and his resentment of it) permeates Spengler's philosophy throughout the Decline and his subsequent works. Thus, Spengler looked at the decline of the West from the perspective of a German looking at "his" Culture, that had hardened into a "Civilization" through the doings of the French revolutionaries and their English adversaries, and the British development that changed everything: the Industrial Revolution. Germany was playing catch-up, and although Spengler believed that the West could not be rejuvenated3, it would at least experience the glory of a world state, the "imperium mundi",4 which Germany would establish. The West would then eventually decline into oblivion. Seen from this perspective, Spengler's distaste for the great cities produced during the Civilizational stage and their Culture is logical, even predictable. 2 See reference list below. 3 Spengler, Decline Vol. 1 pp. 109-10, 167-8. 4 Spengler, Hour Introduction xvi; Decline Vol. 2 p. 109, p. 432; Farrenkopf, Prophet p. 54. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr/vol61/iss61/8 2 Smith: Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The Continuing Relevance o Smith 121 Spengler summarized "the problem of Civilization" as follows: For every Culture has its own Civilization... The Civilization is the inevitable destiny of the Culture... Civilizations... are a conclusion, the thing-become succeeding the thing-becoming, death following life, rigidity following expansion, intellectual age and the stone-built, petrifying world-city following mother- earth and the spiritual childhood of the Doric and Gothic. They are an end, irrevocable, yet by inward necessity reached again and again... ...In a word, Greek soul—Roman intellect, and this antithesis is the differentia between Culture and Civilization... Pure Civilization, as a historical process, consists in a progressive exhaustion of forms that have become inorganic or dead.5 Spengler believed that the transition from Culture to Civilization took place in the Classical world in the fourth century B.C., and in the Western world in the 19lh century A.D.6 Thus, according to Spengler, the West is now well advanced into its Civilization stage. The defining component of the civilization stage is the "megalopolis" or "world-city." Spengler's translator, Charles Francis Atkinson, coined the term "megalopolitan,"7 to mean overgrown urban region, in translation of Spengler's grossstaedtisch. According to Spengler: 5 Spengler, Decline One-Vol. Ed. pp. 24-5. 6 Spengler, Decline One-Vol. Ed. p. 25 7 Spengler, Decline Vol. 1 p. 29 n.2, Decline One-Vol. Ed. p. 23 n. 8; contra credit given to Jean Gottmann in Wikipedia, Answers.com, and geography.about.com. Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2009 3 Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 61 [2009], No. 61, Art. 8 11 u Comparative Civilizations Review, 2009 Fall From these periods onward the great intellectual decisions take place...in three or four world-cities that have absorbed into themselves the whole content of History, while the old wide landscape of the Culture, become merely provincial, serves only to feed the cities with what remains of its higher mankind. World-city and province—the two basic ideas of every Civilization—bring up a wholly new form-problem of History... In place of a world, there is a city, a point, in which the whole life of broad regions is collecting while the rest dries up.8 Thus, the megalopolis sucks everything of value into itself, particularly all people of ability and education, thereby leaving its counterpart, the province, that encompasses the rest of the Civilization, a cultural backwater devoid of any vigor or growth. The city explodes into the megalopolis while the country becomes a vacuum, both culturally and in terms of population. Spengler understood that not all megalopolitans necessarily move to the world-city. Some may live in the country, or return there from university, for example, but they are nevertheless thoroughly megalopolitan in spirit. Furthermore, the megalopolis controls public policy and opinion of the country.9 Spengler's description of the megalopolis, the megalopolitans, and everything having to do with them is consistently negative: In place of a type—true people, born of and grown on the soil, there is a new sort of nomad, cohering unstably in fluid masses, the parasitical city dweller, traditionless, utterly matter-of-fact, religionless, clever, unfruitful, deeply contemptuous of the countryman and g Spengler, Decline One-Vol. Ed. p. 25. 9 Spengler, Decline One-Vol. Ed. p. 247 (footnote omitted). https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/ccr/vol61/iss61/8 4 Smith: Megalopolis versus Social Retardation: The Continuing Relevance o Smith 123 especially that highest form of countryman, the country gentleman. The world-city means cosmopolitanism in place of "home"...To the world-city belongs not a folk but a mob. Its uncomprehending hostility to all the traditions of the Culture (nobility, church, privileges, dynasties, convention in art and limits of knowledge in science), the keen and cold intelligence that confounds the wisdom of the peasant, the new-fashioned naturalism that in relation to all matters of sex and society goes back far to quite primitive instincts and conditions, the reappearance of the panem et circenses in the form of wage-disputes and sports stadia—all these things betoken the definite closing down of the Culture and the opening of a quite new phase of human existence— anti-provincial, late, futureless, but quite inevitable.10 Or again: As the essence of every Culture is religion, so—and consequently—the essence of every Civilization is irreligion—the two words are synonymous. Megalopolis itself, as against the old Culture-towns— Alexandria as against Athens, Paris against Bruges, Berlin against Nuremburg—is irreligious down to the last detail, down to the look of the streets, the dry intelligence of the faces. And, correspondingly, the ethical sentiments belonging to the form-language of the megalopolis are irreligious and soulless also. Socialism is the Faustian [Western] world-feeling become irreligious; "Christianity" so called (and qualified even as "true Christianity") is always on the 10 Spengler, Decline One-Vol. Ed. pp. 25-6 (footnote omitted). Published by BYU ScholarsArchive, 2009 5 Comparative Civilizations Review, Vol. 61 [2009], No. 61, Art. 8 11 u Comparative Civilizations Review, 2009 Fall lips of the English Socialist, to whom it seems to be something in the nature of a "dogma-less morale."11 The megalopolitan in Spengler's mind is traditionless because he loathes the traditions that produced him, i.e., the traditions of his Culture-cum-Civilization.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages29 Page
-
File Size-